About The Author and Artist

Beth "Batyah" Ginzberg is the owner, CEO and founder of "Ginzberg Creative Arts and Writing, Inc." She is a descendant of the Davidic Line of the Mashiach and is an Israelite Hebrew Priestess. Her father was a Levi Hebrew Priest. Ginzberg is an information scientist and an artist and writer. She writes her poetry in honor and memory of her father Emanuel Ginsburg and in honor of and love for her mother Jarie Vavra Granton.


Thursday, January 21, 2016

ENJOYING KOSHER MEATS



How to enjoy the free manna raining down from the heavens that G-d bestows upon you? Appreciate it and thank G-d for it. Knowing that you vastly deserve all that you get and all that you have and everything that life has to offer you that improves your existence and therefore the existence of society as a whole.

"There is no Torah without sustenance." Eating meat is a necessity to studying Torah. The fat in the meat is necessary to replace fat compounds in the brain that naturally die off with time. Meat is energy and the meat that is best to eat is kosher meat.

Kosher meats come from animals who have been blessed at their time of death, and who are slaughtered in a way that does not cause the animal any undue pain. You then are eating the body of an animal that will elevate your existence to one of purity and holiness because of your choice to eat meat that is slaughtered in a holy painless way. You have the thankfulness of the animal in your soul and body as it died peacefully, having its existence of purpose to be of nourishment to you, because your existence has a purpose to be kind to animals and to be kind to humans. A purpose to respect the life/death process, to give it credence, to honor it, to perform special mitzvoth that elevates the purpose of the life of the animal and therefore your life as well.

To eat like the Priests did during the time of Moses, consuming the meats of sacrifice to nourish one's body and mind, to know that you did not contribute to the painful murder of an animal to satiate your physical needs.

Loving every morsel of meat that you eat, as you gave an animal a holy purpose, being a purpose to create peace as is your daily goal, that can be nourished to become actualized as you taste delicious kosher meats and internalize the peaceful state that the animal felt just before he died for you to satisfy your hunger.

Loving the taste of the meats, savoring them in your mouth, loving the animal who gave up his life for you so you could learn more Torah and consequently teach more Torah.

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